Gordon
Well-Known Member
Oxbow BBT, mail order from The Busy Bunny.
When searching for a pellet for adult rabbits check the nutrition information on the bag. What you're looking for is HIGH fiber and LOW protein. The fiber should be at least 18%, higher is better. The protein should NOT be over 14%. Also check the list of ingredients. The first ingredient should be Timothy hay. If the first ingredient listed is anything else, put the bag down and walk away. And don't buy a bag if it has junk food in it, like dehydrated apples, sunflower seeds, etc.
While Oxbow makes a very good pellet, Pixel HATED it! Would not eat Oxbow, at all. I spent alot of time and money looking for a pellet she would eat. Finally, I got some Zupreem, and she loved it!
So, high fiber, low protein, and what tastes good to them.
Flick wrote:When searching for a pellet for adult rabbits check the nutrition information on the bag. What you're looking for is HIGH fiber and LOW protein. The fiber should be at least 18%, higher is better. The protein should NOT be over 14%. Also check the list of ingredients. The first ingredient should be Timothy hay. If the first ingredient listed is anything else, put the bag down and walk away. And don't buy a bag if it has junk food in it, like dehydrated apples, sunflower seeds, etc.
While Oxbow makes a very good pellet, Pixel HATED it! Would not eat Oxbow, at all. I spent alot of time and money looking for a pellet she would eat. Finally, I got some Zupreem, and she loved it!
So, high fiber, low protein, and what tastes good to them.
Okay, okay, I have something to say about this statement-
We're taught in 4-h that rabbit feeds should have a 16-19% protein content to keep the rabbits healthy and in shape conditionwise. I feel GOOD about feeding purina show for this reason. My rabbits have thrived on it! They are all healthy and happy, even considering that, (oh no) it's an ALFALFA pellet.
Now, consider the millionsof show and breeding rabbits kept happy and healthy on Purina pellets. Consider the Millions of rabbits raised on an alfalfa diet, and doing just fine. Now can you tell me, exactly why it is so awful to feed an alfalfa pelleted feed, and one high in protein, because everyone I've asked doesn't seem to know the answer.
I'm not going to argue too extensively. I find it hard to believe that timothy is the way to go, for several reasons, most of which being that it seems to be HRS propagated, as is an all veggie diet,which seems to increase a rabbits chance for GI Stasis.When I was on Bunspace, it seemed like every other topic on the bunny ER area was about GI Stasis, and this was a site that hugely pushed for an all veggie diet. This is the kind of information people get from the HRS.
So, correct me if I'm wrong, I just need to hear exactly WHY lower protein is so much healthier.
There are different requirements for show rabbits than pet rabbits. Show rabbits are usually young and growing, or breeding. These rabbits need the added protein and calcium that older rabbits don't. Alfalfa provides extra protein and calcium. An adult house rabbit doesn't do a lot of physical activity and isn't breeding or growing, so they end up with extra protein in their diet--more than they need.
What usually happens is that when the diet has too much protein, the rabbit gets fat. Protein isn't excreted very well, so all that goes in to the body gets used by the body. Also, when a rabbit has a lot of protein in the diet, they don't eat their cecal pellets, which contain vitamins and protein. They are getting enough protein in the normal food that they don't want to eat their cecal pellets. This means that they don't get all of the vitamins that are also in the cecal pellets.
In addition, the extra calcium in alfalfa isn't good for a rabbit that isn't growing, because rabbits metabolize calcium differently than humans. They excrete it in the urine as salts, and high levels of Ca can lead to bladder stones and sludge. This is another reason alfalfa isn't recommended for adult bunnies.
There is at least one alfalfa-based pellet that I would consider feeding my adult house rabbits, but it has high fiber and low protein (Purina Hi-Fiber Lab Diet) like many Timothy pellets. Not all alfalfa pellets are bad for every rabbit, and you can't lump breeding or growing rabbits into the same group with sedentary adult house bunnies whose only stress in life is when the vacuum cleaner comes out. If I had baby bunnies, I'd absolutely feed them an alfalfa pellet, until they reach 8-12mo of age.
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